» Articles » PMID: 39281663

Undergraduate Acute Care Clinical Competencies for Managing Acute Care Cases in Adult Patients Within a South African In-hospital Environment: A Modified Delphi Study

Overview
Journal Afr J Emerg Med
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Emergency Medicine
Date 2024 Sep 16
PMID 39281663
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Introduction: With the increase of global population, there has been an increased demand for acute care services both locally and globally. In the absence of an acute care competency-based curriculum in South Africa, this study sought to identify the core competencies required by undergraduate medical students to safely manage adult patients within an acute care setting in a South African hospital environment.

Methodology: The modified Delphi study comprised of three rounds. The traditional Delphi method, which uses the same participants across various rounds, was modified by using different stakeholders across the three rounds. Emergency Medicine (EM) specialist trainees (registrars) generated competencies in round one, which were provided to a multi-disciplinary team with expertise in undergraduate curriculum development in round two, using a 5-point Likert scale for rating their agreement-disagreement. Round three entailed inviting the round one contributors to anonymously comment, via online survey, on the competencies generated in round two.

Results: A total of 34 EM registrars participated during round one and 7 curriculum development experts participated during round two. A total of 120 competencies were identified from the 3-round Delphi study; of these 103 (85.8%) were reached by "Strong Agreement"; 16 (13.3%) reached by "Agreement"; and 1 (0.8%) was undecided.

Discussion: The results of the modified Delphi study contributed to developing a comprehensive list of undergraduate acute care clinical competencies set in a South African context. The value of engaging with medical practitioners at the forefront of delivering acute care in a South African healthcare environment who are exposed on a daily basis to the healthcare needs of society, became evident. The findings of this study highlight and reinforce the importance of contextual relevance during the curriculum development process.

Conclusion: The modified Delphi method, based on three iterative rounds and feedback from experts, was effective in reaching consensus on the competencies required by undergraduate medical students to manage acute care adult patients safely within a South African hospital environment.

References
1.
Michels M, Evans D, Blok G . What is a clinical skill? Searching for order in chaos through a modified Delphi process. Med Teach. 2012; 34(8):e573-81. DOI: 10.3109/0142159X.2012.669218. View

2.
Kennedy K . The case in favour of educating medical students about sexual violence. Med Teach. 2014; 36(3):267-8. DOI: 10.3109/0142159X.2014.875618. View

3.
Cameron D, Blitz J, Durrheim D . Teaching young docs old tricks--was Aristotle right? An assessment of the skills training needs and transformation of interns and community service doctors working at a district hospital. S Afr Med J. 2002; 92(4):276-8. View

4.
Monrouxe L, Bullock A, Gormley G, Kaufhold K, Kelly N, Roberts C . New graduate doctors' preparedness for practice: a multistakeholder, multicentre narrative study. BMJ Open. 2018; 8(8):e023146. PMC: 6119440. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023146. View

5.
James S, Miza T . Perceptions of professional nurses regarding introduction of the Batho Pele principles in State hospitals. Curationis. 2015; 38(1). PMC: 6091678. DOI: 10.4102/curationis.v38i1.1128. View